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ellisonz

(27,737 posts)
Wed Feb 8, 2012, 05:31 AM Feb 2012

Is This Russian Landscape the Birthplace of Native Americans?


Kazakh eagle-hunters ride through the Altay Mountains.
Photograph by David Edwards, National Geographic

Mountainous region of Siberia gave rise to New World peoples, study says.
Christine Dell'Amore

National Geographic News
Published February 3, 2012

Native Americans originated from a small mountainous region in southern Siberia, new genetic research shows. The work is the most targeted study yet to suggest a genetic "homeland" for North America's indigenous peoples, according to the authors.

New DNA analysis of ethnic groups living in the Altay Mountains (see map) revealed a unique genetic mutation that also occurs in modern-day northern Native Americans.

A possible link between Siberians and Native Americans is an "age-old question" that was first raised by European explorers in the New World, said study leader Theodore Schurr, an anthropologist at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.

That's because some of those early explorers had also been to Asia, and they noticed physical similarities between the two populations.

More: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2012/01/120203-native-americans-siberia-genes-dna-science/


What do you think the political implications of studies like this potentially are if they are incorporated into school lessons alongside Christopher Columbus etc.?
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Is This Russian Landscape the Birthplace of Native Americans? (Original Post) ellisonz Feb 2012 OP
I think the political implications are pretty much nil RZM Feb 2012 #1
Well...... AverageJoe90 Jun 2012 #2
 

RZM

(8,556 posts)
1. I think the political implications are pretty much nil
Wed Feb 8, 2012, 11:41 PM
Feb 2012

It's not all that different from what we already knew. It just places the ancestral homeland a bit further south and west than was commonly assumed. American history classes usually start with the 'land bridge,' now they will start with a brief comment about Altai before quickly moving on to the bridge.

 

AverageJoe90

(10,745 posts)
2. Well......
Sun Jun 24, 2012, 12:50 AM
Jun 2012

Could this be true for some? Possibly, and certainly so for the Arctic and North Pacific Coast tribes like the Inuit who do have a remarkable similarity to the natives of Siberia. But as for most of the other Native Americans......I don't think so, they're just too diverse linguistically. I think we'll find eventually that they came from many places.....look to the west in particular.

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